Sign Up | Log In
GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Things I learned in physics class
Monday, July 25, 2005 6:14 AM
ZOID
Monday, July 25, 2005 6:23 AM
QBEAM
Quote:But what about this is unscientific? just because something has yet to be proven, doesn't mean that the hypothesis is unscientific. The development of the numerous hypotheses is based on purely scientific grounds (under normal circumstances). You make assumptions based on previous scientific evidence. There is a logical train of thought that leads you to new hypotheses. Yes, there are surely many hypotheses that can lead from a single experiment, and there are many different ones to investigate. The choice is "generally" made from a plausibility argument, (i.e., which hypothesis is more liekyl to prove true), but not necessarily. Sometimes you look at what you think would be more interesting, sometimes you look into what you think is more fun. Is this what you mean by unscientific? Because the hyptothesis is still completely scientifically sound. The decision on what to investigate needs to be made sure, and I'll admit, one doesn't always need to use the scientific method to chose the one to look at, but that doesn't make it unscientific in my opinion.
Monday, July 25, 2005 6:44 AM
SIGMANUNKI
Quote:Originally posted by QBeam: For example, I know that physicists have an emotional attachment to the concept of elegance. (I do to! I'm not pointing fingers...) Theories that propose elegant solutions are presumed to be more likely to be correct. And yet, its doubtful that the concept of elegance could even be operationalized, much less tested scientifically.
Monday, July 25, 2005 6:53 AM
FOURSKYS
Monday, July 25, 2005 6:59 AM
Quote:To be fair, this isn't exactly something that is just emotion. Most (if not all; excluding applied) physical theories to date are elegant. So, it stands to reason that future theories will be elegant as well. ie It is actually a concequence of science not emotion. Although the latter is a consequence of the former. So, this concept is scientifically derived.
Monday, July 25, 2005 7:03 AM
Monday, July 25, 2005 7:10 AM
Quote:Originally posted by QBeam: This is exactly the kind of unscientific thinking I was talking about--confusing a "general trend" that we think we have discerned with something that has been scientifically tested. It is an entirely natural reaction, but it is not scientific. As I said, the concept of elegance probably cannot be operationalized, much less tested. I know for a fact that it has not been, in fact.
Monday, July 25, 2005 7:18 AM
Quote:That may very well be, but what about a comment on that next paragraph I wrote. Rather interesting that you didn't comment on that since it points to a mathematical foundation for elegance.
Thursday, August 11, 2005 6:05 AM
SKYDANCE
Quote:The trouble is, the scientific method is horribly constrained. Human beings simply cannot get by in this world, without accepting many, many things without insisting on scientific verification. Its an interesting thought-problem. How many things do you take on faith each day, before you even make it into the lab (or whereever you go to do your job)?
Quote:the idea that science is all about deductive reasoning is a fiction that results from ...
Quote:My understanding is that QM predicts the probabilities that an investigated particle will be found to possess certain properties (i.e., position or momentum, spin, et cetera). Correct thus far? QM then predicts the odds that the particle will be found in a specific configuration. (How'm I doing?)
Friday, August 12, 2005 5:00 AM
Quote: We're having semantic issues. Faith, as it pertains to religion, is about believing things which can't be shown to others. It has to do with things you experience inside your heart. Unless I totally misunderstand the point of the quote above, QBEAM is talking about the "faith" that everyone will stop at the red light, and no one will jump out of the bushes at you, and the car will start. That's not based on something you felt in your heart; it's based on years of observation (and tempered with the awareness that each of these things could happen, but you have made appropriate preparations should the extremely rare circumstance arise).
Quote: As far as "scientists are every bit as prone to irrational assumptions and emotional attachment to ideas as anyone else" ... well. We're human, eh? That's why we insist on the Scientific Method: to eliminate those personal attachments from the results. However, they still limit the theories we're able to conceive, and that does put a bit of a brake on how quickly we can grow.
Quote:Quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- the idea that science is all about deductive reasoning is a fiction that results from ... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hogwash. It doesn't result from anything except people looking at effect and confusing it with cause. "Deductive reasoning" is a smokescreen. People don't follow logical chains to arrive at conclusions! They leap forward and see possible conclusions, then they weed out the bad conclusions from the good ones by seeing which have a chain of deductive reasoning that leads to them. You always know the answer before you find the chain of logic that gets you there.
Quote:However, this doesn't invalidate the scientific method. In fact, it validates it: (1) theorize (2) devise tests (3) observe results. It's the same way humans do everything else, but formalizing it as the scientific method ensures we don't skip any steps. I think QBEAM is getting into trouble by equating "scientific" with the body of published journals & peer review. The scientific method itself only requires one person.
YOUR OPTIONS
NEW POSTS TODAY
OTHER TOPICS
FFF.NET SOCIAL